Last Winter, the Village of Lake Barrington published the following in their seasonal newsletter:
"Lake Barrington's Ethics Commission
Did you know that the Village has an Ethics Commission? The independent commission adds to the overall transparency of our government and serves to investigate complaints alleging violations of the Ethics Chapter of the Village Code. We are proud to report that this 3-member Commission has never once had to meet regarding a violation!"
Their Municipal Code actually devotes a chapter to ethics, and the main page of their website contains a link to, "Report a Concern."
As previously chronicled in this publication, if one searches our Village Code, keying in the word "ethics," the result reads, "No Matches Found."
Our Village needs an Ethics Commission. How else could parties involved in complaints present their respective cases to determine if ethics violations did, or did not, occur? Listed below are typical practices that might arise in our Village, and in our opinion, may warrant investigation, understanding that there are no implications as to guilt or innocence of any on the list:
- Should expensive legal battles, possibly precipitated by actions of elected and appointed Village officials, be investigated?
- Should the hiring and retention of Village paid staff positions by elected family members be investigated?
- Should contracts with vendors who maintain personal and professional relationships with elected Village officials and their families be investigated?
- Should the solicitations of funds and hand selection of vendors by family members or close friends of elected Village officials, absent oversight by appointed Village committees, be investigated?
For these and other reasons, our Village needs to appoint an Ethics Commission to act as ombudsmen, when any question of potential maladministration or ethics violations is considered or occurs.
Candidates for this proposed commission could come from existing appointed Village bodies, ones whose objectivity would be unquestioned.
The perfect candidates for this roll are the incumbent members of the Board of Heath. They are highly qualified, underutilized, and would prove to be an effective force in maintaining ethical governance of the Village of Barrington Hills.
Related: "Our predominantly pusillanimous Village Board (Part 1)," "Our predominantly pusillanimous Village Board (Part 2)," "Better Government Association Commends Passage of Chicago Ethics Ordinance–Sees More to Do," "What happened to ethics reform in Illinois government? Why watchdogs have some hope," "Meanwhile, One Barrington Hills makes amends, extinguishes website and turns the volume down," "Learn from your (big) mistake, Laura, Bryan, Dave and Tom," "Agreed"
No comments:
Post a Comment